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Measuring Children'S Time Use: A Review Of Methodologies And Findings

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  • David J. Harding

    (Princeton University)

Abstract

For those interested in child wellbeing, time use can provide an unusually objective measure of exactly what youth are doing. Before we can evaluate how well children are doing and why some are doing better than others, it is important to understand what they are doing, with whom, and in which social contexts and institutions. The report is intended to serve as a basic starting point for those interested in pursuing research in children and adolescents? time use. It presents an overview of recent research on how American youth use time, focusing on methodological issues in measuring their time use and highlighting substantive findings from the literature. The procedures, advantages, and disadvantages of the three primary methods of measuring children?s time use, along with general issues which are relevant to all three methods, are discussed. Findings include general results about how youth divide their time between life?s domains such as work, maintenance, and leisure, relationships between time use and outcomes, and how youth differ in time use by race, class, gender, and age, with special attention paid to the area which has inspired the most time-use research, girls' and boys' household work.

Suggested Citation

  • David J. Harding, 1997. "Measuring Children'S Time Use: A Review Of Methodologies And Findings," Working Papers 987, Princeton University, School of Public and International Affairs, Center for Research on Child Wellbeing..
  • Handle: RePEc:pri:crcwel:wp97-01-harding.pdf
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    File URL: https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.950.6041&rep=rep1&type=pdf
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    1. Abraham Silvers & B. Thomas Florence & Daniel L. Rourke & Ronald J. Lorimor, 1994. "How Children Spend Their Time: A Sample Survey for Use in Exposure and Risk Assessments," Risk Analysis, John Wiley & Sons, vol. 14(6), pages 931-944, December.
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    Cited by:

    1. Sudha Narayanan & Sowmya Dhanraj, 2013. "Child Work and Schooling in Rural North India: What do Time Use Data Say about Tradeoffs and Drivers of Human Capital Investment?," Working Papers id:5597, eSocialSciences.

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